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Best Famous Keith Poems

Here is a collection of the all-time best famous Keith poems. This is a select list of the best famous Keith poetry. Reading, writing, and enjoying famous Keith poetry (as well as classical and contemporary poems) is a great past time. These top poems are the best examples of keith poems.

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Written by Keith Douglas | Create an image from this poem

Vergissmeinnicht

 Three weeks gone and the combatants gone
returning over the nightmare ground
we found the place again, and found
the soldier sprawling in the sun.
The frowning barrel of his gun overshadowing.
As we came on that day, he hit my tank with one like the entry of a demon.
Look.
Here in the gunpit spoil the dishonoured picture of his girl who has put: Steffi.
Vergissmeinnicht.
in a copybook gothic script.
We see him almost with content, abased, and seeming to have paid and mocked at by his own equipment that's hard and good when he's decayed.
But she would weep to see today how on his skin the swart flies move; the dust upon the paper eye and the burst stomach like a cave.
For here the lover and killer are mingled who had one body and one heart.
And death who had the soldier singled has done the lover mortal hurt.


Written by Keith Douglas | Create an image from this poem

How To Kill

 Under the parabola of a ball,
a child turning into a man,
I looked into the air too long.
The ball fell in my hand, it sang in the closed fist: Open Open Behold a gift designed to kill.
Now in my dial of glass appears the soldier who is going to die.
He smiles, and moves about in ways his mother knows, habits of his.
The wires touch his face: I cry NOW.
Death, like a familiar, hears And look, has made a man of dust of a man of flesh.
This sorcery I do.
Being damned, I am amused to see the centre of love diffused and the wave of love travel into vacancy.
How easy it is to make a ghost.
The weightless mosquito touches her tiny shadow on the stone, and with how like, how infinite a lightness, man and shadow meet.
They fuse.
A shadow is a man when the mosquito death approaches
Written by Keith Douglas | Create an image from this poem

Villanelle Of Spring Bells

 Bells in the town alight with spring
converse, with a concordance of new airs
make clear the fresh and ancient sound they sing.
People emerge from winter to hear them ring, children glitter with mischief and the blind man hears bells in the town alight with spring.
Even he on his eyes feels the caressing finger of Persephone, and her voice escaped from tears make clear the fresh and ancient sound they sing.
Bird feels the enchantment of his wing and in ten fine notes dispels twenty cares.
Bells in the town alight with spring warble the praise of Time, for he can bring this season: chimes the merry heaven bears make clear the fresh and ancient sound they sing.
All evil men intent on evil thing falter, for in their cold unready ears bells in the town alight with spring make clear the fresh and ancient sound they sing.
Written by Keith Douglas | Create an image from this poem

Cairo Jag

 Shall I get drunk or cut myself a piece of cake,
a pasty Syrian with a few words of English
or the Turk who says she is a princess--she dances
apparently by levitation? Or Marcelle, Parisienne
always preoccupied with her dull dead lover:
she has all the photographs and his letters
tied in a bundle and stamped Decede in mauve ink.
All this takes place in a stink of jasmin.
But there are the streets dedicated to sleep stenches and the sour smells, the sour cries do not disturb their application to slumber all day, scattered on the pavement like rags afflicted with fatalism and hashish.
The women offering their children brown-paper breasts dry and twisted, elongated like the skull, Holbein's signature.
But his stained white town is something in accordance with mundane conventions- Marcelle drops her Gallic airs and tragedy suddenly shrieks in Arabic about the fare with the cabman, links herself so with the somnambulists and legless beggars: it is all one, all as you have heard.
But by a day's travelling you reach a new world the vegetation is of iron dead tanks, gun barrels split like celery the metal brambles have no flowers or berries and there are all sorts of manure, you can imagine the dead themselves, their boots, clothes and possessions clinging to the ground, a man with no head has a packet of chocolate and a souvenir of Tripoli.
Written by Keith Douglas | Create an image from this poem

The Knife

 Can I explain this to you? Your eyes
are entrances the mouths of caves
I issue from wonderful interiors
upon a blessed sea and a fine day,
from inside these caves I look and dream.
Your hair explicable as a waterfall in some black liquid cooled by legend fell across my thought in a moment became a garment I am naked without lines drawn across through morning and evening.
And in your body each minute I died moving your thigh could disinter me from a grave in a distant city: your breasts deserted by cloth, clothed in twilight filled me with tears, sweet cups of flesh.
Yes, to touch two fingers made us worlds stars, waters, promontories, chaos swooning in elements without form or time come down through long seas among sea marvels embracing like survivors in our islands.
This I think happened to us together though now no shadow of it flickers in your hands your eyes look down on ordinary streets If I talk to you I might be a bird with a message, a dead man, a photograph.


Written by Barry Tebb | Create an image from this poem

Bridge Over The Aire Book 6

 THE WALK TO THE PARADISE GARDENS



1



Bonfire Night beckoned us to the bridge

By Saint Hilda’s where we started down

Knostrop to chump but I trailed behind

With Margaret when it was late September

The song of summer ceased and fires in

Blackleaded grates began and we were

Hidden from the others by the bridge’s span.
2 When you bent I saw the buds of your breasts As you meant and I laughed at your craft when You blushed and denied and finally cried But there was a smile in your eyes.
3 It was the season of yo-yo’s in yellow or Pink or pillar-box red and you spooled out The thread as only you could and it dipped And rose like a dancer.
4 The paddock by the tusky sheds was cropped And polished by the horses’ hooves, their Nostrils flared and they bared their teeth As we passed and tossed their manes as we Shied from the rusty fence where peg-legged We jumped the cracks and pulled away each Dandelion head, “Pee-the-bed! Pee-the bed!” Rubbing the yellow dust into each other’s Cheeks and chins as we kissed.
5 The bluebells had died and on the other side The nettle beds were filled with broken branches White as bone, clouds were tags of wool, the Night sky magenta sands with bands of gold And bright stars beckoned and burned like Ragged robins in a ditch and rich magnolias In East End Park.
6 I am alone in the dark Remembering Bonfire Night Of nineteen-fifty four When it was early dusk Your hair was gold As angels’ wings.
7 From the binyard in the backstreet we brought The dry stored branches, broken staves under The taunting stars and we have never left That night or that place on the Hollows The fire we built has never gone out and The light in your eyes is bright: We took the road by the river with a star Map and dream sacks on our backs.
8 The Hollows stretched into darkness The fire burned in the frost, sparks Crackled and jumped and floated Stars into the invisible night and The log glowed red and the fire we Fed has never died.
9 The catherine-wheel pinned to the palings Hissed and spun as we ran passed the railings Rattling our sticks until the stars had beat retreat.
10 From the night comes a figure Into the firelight: Margaret Gardiner My first, my only love, the violet pools Of your eyes, your voice still calling, “I am here, I am waiting.
” 11 Where the road turns Past St Hilda’s Down Knostrop By the Black Road By the Red Road Interminable blue And I remember you, Margaret, in your Mauve blazer standing By the river, your Worn-out flower patterned Frock and black Laceless runners 12 Into the brewer’s yard Stumbled the drayhorses Armoured in leather And clashing brass Strident as Belshazzar’s Feast, rich as yeast On Auntie Nellie’s Baking board, barrels Banked on barrels From the cooper’s yard.
13 Margaret, are you listening? Are your eyes still distant And dreaming? Can you hear My voice in Eden? My poems are all for you The one who never knew Silent and most generous Muse, eternal primavera Under the streetlamps Of Leeds Nine.
14 Margaret, hold my hand As we set out into the Land of summers lost A day-time ghost surrenders At the top of the steps To the Aire where we Looked over the Hollows Misted with memory and Images of summer.
We are standing on the corner of Falmouth Place We are standing by the steps to the Aire We are standing outside the Maypole Falling into Eden.
15 Falling into Eden is just a beginning Hoardings on the gable ends for household Soap, washing is out on the lines Falmouth Street full of children playing, Patrick Keown, Keith Ibbotson, the Flaherty Twins spilling over the pavements, holding A skipping rope, whirling and twirling; Margaret you never missed a turn While I could never make one, out before I began.

Book: Shattered Sighs